Public asked to help monitor life on earth

OSLO (Reuters) – Scientists asked people around the  world today to help compile an Internet-based observatory of  life on earth as a guide to everything from the impact of  climate change on wildlife to pests that can damage crops.

“I would hope that … we might even have millions of people  providing data” in the long term, James Edwards, head of the  Encyclopedia of Life (EOL) based at the Smithsonian Institution  in Washington, told Reuters of the 10-year project.

He said scientific organisations were already working to  link up thousands of computer databases of animals and plants  into a one-stop “virtual observatory” that could be similar to  global systems for monitoring the weather or earthquakes.

People in many countries already log observations on the  Internet, ranging from sightings of rare birds in Canada to the  dates on which flowers bloom in spring in Australia. The new  system, when up and running, would link up the disparate sites.

About 400 biology and technology experts from 50 countries  will meet in London from June 1-3 at an “e-Biosphere” conference  organised by the EOL to discuss the plans. The EOL is separately  trying to describe the world’s species online.

“This would be a free system that everyone can access and  contribute to,” said Norman MacLeod, keeper of palaeontology at  the Natural History Museum in London which is hosting the talks.

Edwards said a biodiversity overview could have big economic  benefits, for instance an unusual insect found in a garden might  be an insect pest brought unwittingly in a grain shipment that  could disrupt local agriculture.

Among health benefits could be understanding any shifts in  the ranges of malaria-carrying mosquitoes linked to global  warming, Edwards said.

“Within 10 years, scientists say they could have an  efficient and effective way of tracking changes over time in the  range and abundance of plants and animals as worldwide  temperature and precipitation patterns shift,” a statement said.

And plane accidents might be averted by studying DNA genetic  samples of birds sucked into jet engines and the timing,  altitude and routes of bird migrations.